Monika Ertl Explained

Monika Ertl
Birth Date:17 August 1937
Birth Place:Munich, Germany
Death Date:12 May 1973 (aged 35)
Death Place:El Alto, La Paz, Bolivia
Death Cause:Killed by Bolivian security services
Nationality:German, Bolivian
Known For:Murdering Toto Quintanilla

Monika Ertl (17 August 1937 – 12 May 1973) was a German-Bolivian communist militant and guerrilla fighter and the daughter of Nazi propagandist Hans Ertl.[1] She is most known for assassinating Colonel Roberto Quintanilla Pereira, the man responsible for chopping off Che Guevara's hands. This successful assassination earned her the title 'Che Guevara's avenger' in Germany. She continued to serve as a soldier in the National Liberation Army (ELN) resisting the Bolivian government, until she was killed by Bolivian security services in 1973. Her body was never returned to her family, and the site of her grave remains unknown.

Biography

Ertl was born in Munich. After World War II her father immigrated to Bolivia, where he continued to film for some time and became a farmer.

Monika Ertl came to Bolivia in 1952 when her father brought the family over from Germany. Her father established a new life on the farm La Dolorida where he bred livestock.[2] In Bolivia, she accompanied her father on several filming expeditions and learnt to use both a film camera and firearms. Later, she entered a marriage briefly, but felt unhappy playing the "trophy wife" of a Bolivian-German mining engineer. After her divorce in 1969, she became involved with the survivors of Che Guevara's routed guerrilla movement, the National Liberation Army of Bolivia (ELN). After helping out in minor occasions she finally joined the political underground. She began a relationship with the ELN leader, the successor of Che Guevara. Peredo was killed by Bolivian Police forces in a shootout in La Paz on 9 September 1969.[3] In Germany, she became known as "Che Guevara's avenger" because of her involvement in the 1971 murder of Colonel Roberto Quintanilla Pereira in Hamburg, Germany: although this has never been completely proven, it is assumed that she shot Quintanilla who, at the time, was serving in Hamburg as the Bolivian consul. A message found at the murder scene read "Victory or Death", a slogan of the ELN. Former ELN leader Osvaldo "Chato" Peredo confirmed, in an interview filmed by German director Christian Baudissin in 1988, that Quintanilla was a prime target of the ELN because he had been responsible for ordering the hands of Guevara's corpse be cut off and sent to La Paz for further identification. He also states that Ertl "after carrying out the mission in Hamburg" returned to Cuba where she met with Régis Debray.

After being under covert observation in Bolivia for several days, she and another guerrilla were eventually ambushed and killed by Bolivian security forces on 12 May 1973 in El Alto (in La Paz), where she was reorganizing the ELN. According to Régis Debray, she was also preparing the abduction of the former Gestapo Chief of Lyon Klaus Barbie to bring him to Chile and consequently to justice in France where he was wanted as a Nazi war criminal.[4] At the time Barbie was known to be an adviser of the secret police in Bolivia. Her body was not turned over to her family to be buried and she rests in an unknown grave.

Popular culture

Further reading

Wanted: Monika Ertl, feature length documentary 1989

Sie starb wie Che Guevara. Die Geschichte der Monika Ertl. Artemis & Winkler, Düsseldorf 2009

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Margaret Randall. More Than Things. 1 October 2013. U of Nebraska Press. 978-0-8032-4697-3. 316.
  2. Web site: Leben und Sterben der Monika Ertl - DER SPIEGEL - Geschichte. SPIEGEL. Christoph Gunkel, DER. www.spiegel.de. de. 13 May 2020.
  3. Book: McFarran, Peter. Devil's Agent. Iglesias. Fadrique. Xlibris Corporation. 2013. 9781483636429. 297–298.
  4. Book: McFarran, Peter. Devil's Agent. Iglesias. Fadrique. Xlibris Corporation. 2013. 9781483636429. 298.
  5. Web site: Amon Düül II – Vive La Trance . 2024-04-12 . discogs.